Word: authorized
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Dates: during 1900-1909
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...first periodical published at Harvard was "The Lyceum," which appeared in July, 1810. It was a bi-weekly magazine of about twenty-four pages, which lasted through eighteen numbers. Among its principal contributors were Edward Everett, Samuel Gilman, author of "Fair Harvard," and Nathaniel Frothingham. The contributions consisted of poetry, short essays and criticisms...
...lately been made to the Harvard University collection in the Gore Hall Library. It consists of a volume of records of the class of '29 among the many famous members of which were Oliver Wendell Holmes, James Freeman Clarke, Benjamin R. Curtis, and Dr. S. F. Smith, the author of "America." According to agreement, the book remained in the hands of the late Rev. Samuel May, the first and only secretary of the class, until his death, and was then handed over to the Library. It is remarkable for the completeness of the class records, consisting of biographies, photographs, newspaper...
Professor Dunbar is the author of a work on the "Theory and History of Banking," and the compiler of the "Laws of the United States on Currency and Banking." He frequently contributed articles to the Quarterly Journal of Economics, as well as to other magazines, and he was, for a time, president of the Economic Association of America. He was a member of the Massachusetts Historical Society, a fellow of the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, and a holder of the degree of LL.D. from Harvard...
...Ladrone Islands in the Pacific. His story is not skillfully written, but is vigorous and full of life. The plot deals with the passionate and unselfish love of a native woman for a white adventurer. The story was, perhaps, inspired by Kipling's "Without Benefit of Clergy," but the author's development of the idea has many original merits. "A Circus Madonna," by Murray Seasongood '00 is a feeble attempt at delineation of character. "Mary," by Ernest A. Wye '01, is a most disappointing story. It starts well, but ends nowhere. After sketching characters and choosing a good setting...
Radcliffe College Scholarship Fund. The Battle with the Slums. (Illustrated with Stereopticon). Mr. Jacob A. Riis, author of "How the other Half Lives." Sanders Theatre, 8 p. m. Tickets with reserved seats, fifty cents, for sale at Seaver's and Amee...